Tag: over-assessed

  • The Dallas-Area Cities Where Homes Are Most Over-Assessed (2026)

    The Dallas-Area Cities Where Homes Are Most Over-Assessed (2026)

    Short answer: Across Dallas County, over-assessment clusters by city. Our analysis of public DCAD appraisal data found the highest rates in Richardson (about 20% of homes), Farmers Branch, and Mesquite, where homes are most often valued above truly comparable neighbors. The largest dollar gaps, though, are in Highland Park — where an over-assessed home is off by roughly $343,000 on average.

    • Richardson leads Dallas County at ~20% of homes over-assessed.
    • Highland Park has the largest dollar gaps — about $343,000 on average.
    • Even the city of Dallas, with 229,000 homes analyzed, runs over 15%.
    • A high city-wide rate doesn't mean your specific home is over-assessed.
    • Over-assessment is decided home-by-home against your own comparables.

    Which Dallas-area cities are most over-assessed?

    We analyzed Dallas Central Appraisal District (DCAD) records for hundreds of thousands of homes and compared each one to truly comparable neighboring properties — the same neighborhood, property class, and era of construction. Homes valued more than 10% above the median of their peer group were flagged as likely over-assessed, the same equal-and-uniform standard used in a Texas protest.

    Because Dallas County is a patchwork of distinct cities, we grouped the results by city rather than ZIP code.

    Share of over-assessed homes by Dallas-area city
    Richardson20.4%
    Farmers Branch19.1%
    Mesquite16.5%
    Carrollton16.2%
    Garland15.9%
    Sunnyvale15.4%
    Dallas15.3%
    Percentage of homes valued more than 10% above their comparable neighbors, by city (DCAD data, 2026).

    How we measured over-assessment

    Texas law says your home should not be appraised higher than comparable homes around it (Texas Tax Code §41.43(b)(3)). We applied that principle at scale:

    • We grouped every residential parcel with truly comparable homes — matched on DCAD neighborhood code, property class, and decade built.
    • Within each group, we found the median improvement value per square foot.
    • Any home more than 10% above its group’s median was flagged as likely over-assessed, and we estimated its gap.

    These are estimates from public data, not official determinations — but they mirror the exact evidence an appraisal review board weighs in a protest.

    Rate isn't the whole story: Highland Park vs. Richardson

    Two very different cities top our lists in two different ways. Richardson has the highest share of over-assessed homes (about 1 in 5), but its average gap is modest. Highland Park has a lower share — yet its over-assessed homes are off by roughly $343,000 each, by far the largest dollar gaps in the county.

    The lesson: in high-value cities, even a small percentage over-assessment is a lot of money. If you own an expensive home, a smaller-looking gap can still mean thousands of dollars a year in overpaid taxes.

    What this means for your home

    A high city-wide rate does not mean your home is over-assessed — and a low rate does not mean it isn’t. Every city on this list has thousands of homes, and over-assessment is decided property-by-property against your specific comparables.

    The only way to know is to check your own address. If your home is valued above its comparable neighbors, that gap is money you may be overpaying in property taxes every year — and it’s the basis for a protest.

    Dallas County cities by over-assessment rate (2026)

    City Homes analyzed % over-assessed Avg. estimated gap
    Richardson 20,687 20.4% $55,000
    Farmers Branch 8,627 19.1% $45,000
    Mesquite 37,025 16.5% $31,000
    Carrollton 11,128 16.2% $45,000
    Garland 60,226 15.9% $36,000
    Sunnyvale 2,842 15.4% $75,000
    Dallas 229,045 15.3% $71,000
    Balch Springs 5,661 14.4% $28,000
    Highland Park 3,129 13.9% $343,000
    Rowlett 18,566 13.9% $42,000

    Check your home in minutes

    Tax Gaps TX has a free home check at app.taxgapstx.com/check — enter your address and, in about a minute, see your estimated over-assessment gap for Travis (TCAD) or Dallas (DCAD) county, based on public appraisal data and comparable homes assessed for less than yours. A specialist can then walk you through the evidence and whether it's worth protesting.

    Find your gap free →

    Frequently asked questions

    Does a high city rate mean my home is over-assessed?

    No. Over-assessment is decided home-by-home against your specific comparable properties. A high-ranked city just means a larger share of homes there are over-assessed — your home could be fine, or a home in a lower-ranked city could be significantly over-assessed.

    Why is Highland Park's dollar gap so much larger?

    Highland Park has some of the most expensive homes in Texas, so even a modest percentage over-assessment translates into a very large dollar amount. Rate and dollar impact are two different things.

    How do I check whether my own home is over-assessed?

    Enter your address at app.taxgapstx.com/check. We pull DCAD appraisal data, find comparable homes assessed for less, and show your estimated gap — the evidence you'd use to protest.

    Is this an official DCAD determination?

    No. These are estimates built from public DCAD data for informational purposes. Confirm any figures with the Dallas Central Appraisal District before filing a protest.

    Tax Gaps TX provides general information, not legal, tax, or financial advice. Deadlines and exemption amounts change; confirm current figures with your county appraisal district or the Texas Comptroller.

  • The Travis County ZIP Codes Where Homes Are Most Over-Assessed (2026)

    The Travis County ZIP Codes Where Homes Are Most Over-Assessed (2026)

    Short answer: Across Travis County, some ZIP codes have far more over-assessed homes than others. Our analysis of public TCAD appraisal data found the highest rates in downtown Austin (78701, about 25% of homes) and West Austin, where homes are most often valued above truly comparable nearby properties. In these areas, roughly one in five homes may have grounds for an equal-and-uniform protest.

    • 78701 (Downtown Austin) has the highest over-assessment rate at ~25%.
    • West Austin ZIPs — 78703 and 78746 — carry the largest dollar gaps.
    • Even in lower-ranked ZIPs, thousands of individual homes are over-assessed.
    • Over-assessment is measured against comparable homes, not the whole market.
    • The only way to know about your home is to check it directly.

    Which Travis County ZIP codes are most over-assessed?

    We analyzed Travis Central Appraisal District (TCAD) records for hundreds of thousands of Travis County homes and compared each one to truly similar neighboring properties — the same neighborhood, property class, and era of construction. Homes valued more than 10% above the median of their peer group were flagged as likely over-assessed, the same equal-and-uniform standard used in a Texas protest.

    The table below shows the ZIP codes with the highest share of over-assessed homes, along with the average estimated gap for the flagged homes in each area.

    Share of over-assessed homes by Travis County ZIP
    78701 · Downtown25.1%
    78747 · Onion Creek21.4%
    78703 · Clarksville18.8%
    78746 · Westlake17.7%
    78739 · Circle C17.1%
    78731 · NW Hills17%
    78744 · SE Austin16.7%
    Percentage of homes valued more than 10% above their comparable neighbors, by ZIP (TCAD data, 2026).

    How we measured over-assessment

    Texas law says your home should not be appraised higher than comparable homes around it (Texas Tax Code §41.43(b)(3)). We applied that principle at scale:

    • We grouped every residential parcel with truly comparable homes — matched on TCAD neighborhood code, property class, and decade built.
    • Within each group, we found the median improvement value per square foot — the market’s read on a fair rate.
    • Any home more than 10% above its group’s median was flagged as likely over-assessed, and we estimated its gap.

    These are estimates from public data, not official determinations — but they mirror the exact evidence an appraisal review board weighs in a protest.

    Why downtown and West Austin top the list

    The leading ZIPs share a trait: they contain a wide mix of home values. When a neighborhood packs together older and newer, smaller and larger, or renovated and original homes, TCAD’s mass-appraisal models struggle to value each one fairly — so more homes end up above their comparable median.

    That’s why high-value areas like 78703 (Clarksville/Tarrytown) and 78746 (West Lake Hills) not only rank high, but also carry the largest dollar gaps — six figures on average for the flagged homes. In pricier ZIPs, even a modest percentage over-assessment is a lot of money.

    What this means for your home

    A high ZIP-level rate does not mean your home is over-assessed — and a low rate does not mean it isn’t. Every ZIP on this list has thousands of homes; even the lower-ranked areas contain many over-assessed properties. Over-assessment is decided home-by-home, against your specific comparables.

    The only way to know is to check your own address. If your home is valued above its comparable neighbors, that gap is money you may be overpaying in property taxes every year — and it’s the basis for a protest.

    Travis County ZIP codes by over-assessment rate (2026)

    ZIP Area Homes analyzed % over-assessed Avg. estimated gap
    78701 Downtown Austin 2,657 25.1% $367,000
    78747 SE Austin / Onion Creek 6,928 21.4% $45,000
    78703 West Austin / Clarksville 5,729 18.8% $191,000
    78746 West Lake Hills 8,671 17.7% $299,000
    78739 Circle C Ranch 6,670 17.1% $83,000
    78731 Northwest Hills 7,848 17.0% $141,000
    78744 SE Austin / McKinney 9,953 16.7% $39,000
    78733 Bee Cave / Cuernavaca 3,026 16.7% $154,000
    78617 Del Valle 4,136 16.0% $29,000
    78759 NW Austin / Balcones 9,487 15.8% $63,000

    Check your home in minutes

    Tax Gaps TX has a free home check at app.taxgapstx.com/check — enter your address and, in about a minute, see your estimated over-assessment gap for Travis (TCAD) or Dallas (DCAD) county, based on public appraisal data and comparable homes assessed for less than yours. A specialist can then walk you through the evidence and whether it's worth protesting.

    Find your gap free →

    Frequently asked questions

    Does a high ZIP-code rate mean my home is over-assessed?

    No. Over-assessment is decided home-by-home against your specific comparable properties. A high-ranked ZIP just means a larger share of homes there are over-assessed — your home could be fine, or a home in a low-ranked ZIP could be significantly over-assessed.

    What does 'over-assessed' mean here?

    We flagged a home as likely over-assessed if its improvement value per square foot was more than 10% above the median of truly comparable homes — same neighborhood, class, and decade built. That's the equal-and-uniform standard used in a Texas protest.

    How do I check whether my own home is over-assessed?

    Enter your address at app.taxgapstx.com/check. We pull your county's appraisal data, find comparable homes assessed for less, and show your estimated gap — the evidence you'd use to protest.

    Is this an official TCAD determination?

    No. These are estimates built from public TCAD data for informational purposes. Confirm any figures with the Travis Central Appraisal District before filing a protest.

    Tax Gaps TX provides general information, not legal, tax, or financial advice. Deadlines and exemption amounts change; confirm current figures with your county appraisal district or the Texas Comptroller.